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Hendra virus is a highly lethal zoonotic pathogen primarily transmitted from flying foxes to horses and occasionally humans, ...
Twenty new viruses have been discovered within bats in China, "raising urgent concerns" that these diseases might spill over ...
The death of an unvaccinated horse from Hendra virus this week in southeast Queensland is the state’s first reported case in ...
The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued an urgent global alert following an outbreak of the Nipah virus in Kerala, India. This zoonotic pathogen, originating in fruit bats a ...
Because henipavirus can spread through urine, the study’s authors have raised concerns about the virus jumping to humans or livestock through contaminated fruit.
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Health and Me on MSNWhy The Nipah Virus Still Persists After 25 Years In Southeast AsiaNipah virus, first identified in 1998, remains a deadly threat due to bat reservoirs, human practices, high fatality rates, no vaccine, and risk of wider global spread.
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Medindia on MSNNew Bat Viruses Found in China Raise Global Spillover ConcernsA new international study has identified 20 previously unknown viruses in bats in China's Yunnan province, including two that ...
Nipah (NiV) and Hendra (HeV) viruses, two closely related members of the Henipavirus genus, continue to raise global concern due to their high mortality rates and potential for zoonotic spillover.
The research team warned that this henipavirus can spread through bat urine. This means bats might contaminate the fruit people eat, making it easier for the virus to spread.
20 new viruses have been found in bats from China’s Yunnan. Two of them are genetically similar to lethal Nipah and Hendra, raising fears of spillover via contaminated fruits or water.
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